The $5 Liberty Gold Half Eagle coins were designed by Christian Gobrecht and were minted from 1838-1907. PCGS has graded these coins an MS-63, meaning their beautiful design has survived the test of time.

Coin Highlights:

Contains .2419 oz Gold.

PCGS encapsulation guarantees the MS-63 condition.

Obverse: Shows Liberty encircled by 13 stars with the word "Liberty" on her hair band.

Reverse: Features a heraldic eagle with a shield on its breast, surrounded by "United States of America" and the denomination.

Following the Coinage Act of 1792, the United States Mint began issuing Gold coins in 1795 with the Turban Head Eagle. This $10 Gold coin was struck by the United States Mint from 1795 until 1804. There are a wide variety of sizes and designs of pre-1933 Gold coins available but the majority of coins produced were the Liberty Head Gold Eagle, the Indian Head Gold Eagle and the iconic Saint-Gaudens Double Eagle. In 1850, in response to the Gold Rush in California and the increasing amount of Gold available in the United States, the Double Eagle was introduced. American Gold coins struck before 1933 are some of the most rare, desirable and beautiful in the world. From Liberty Head Gold $1 coins to $10 Indian Gold Eagles and the coveted Saint-Gaudens Double Eagle, these coins are a piece of history.

In the early 1900s, President Theodore Roosevelt called for a renaissance in American coinage. Unhappy with the current designs on American coins, he called upon sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens to head the redesign of America’s coins. Out of this renaissance came the Saint-Gaudens Double Eagle Gold coin. One of the most sought after and beautiful coins ever produced by the United States Mint, this Double Eagle was minted from 1907 until 1933. The design was later reprised in 1986 when the mint issued the new Gold Eagle bullion coin.

In 1933, President Franklin Roosevelt issued Executive Order 6102 which forbade the “hoarding of Gold Coin, Gold bullion and Gold certificates within the continental United States.” As a result of this order, the possession of monetary Gold owned by any person, partnership or company was criminalized, Gold coins were pulled out of circulation and almost all Gold was exchanged for paper money. Exceptions were made for collector coins and jewelry. As the Great Depression ravaged the economy, it was believed that “hoarding” Gold stalled economic growth and worsened the economic state of the country. In order to combat this, it was ordered that all Gold be turned into the U.S. Mint to be melted down. The belief was that if Gold could not legally be owned, it could not be redeemed, therefore ending the constraints on the Federal Reserve. Thus, the United States abandoned the Gold standard.

The following year, President Roosevelt signed the Gold Reserve Act of 1934. This act required that all Gold (except for jewelry and collector’s coins) and Gold certificates held by the Federal Reserve be sold to the United States Treasury. The law also changed the nominal price of Gold from $20.67 per troy ounce to $35.00 per troy ounce. Because of this, foreign investors flocked to export their Gold holdings overseas to the United States and the dollar devalued to spark inflation. The increase in the money supply increased real interest rates and encouraged more investments in durable goods. After the Gold Reserve Act, inflation drastically decreased from -9.8 percent to 2.3 percent and has not dropped below -2.1 percent since.

Because of Executive Order 6102, Gold coins produced by the U.S. Mint prior to 1933 are extremely rare. The coins that remain today have withstood the test of time and survived a governmental expropriation of Gold. These coins are a beautiful testament to the art and history of the coins themselves and the United States as a whole.

For the gold half eagle, there are at least 19 mint years with mintage in excess of 950,000. I fully expected to receive one of those high mintage years, but the coin I rec'd was 1908 with a "mere" mintage of about 422,000. Plus, this is the last year of mintage for the half eagle, and my coin is an attractive solid ms63. Apmex has provided excellent value, I WILL be buying more of these!

This coin was graded by PCGS as MS-63, but I found a lot of dark spots on coins, may be due to copper oxidation ( 10% of copper in coin). I suppose that slab of PCGS must be air and water tight, but holder itself was very old and with scratches and not as shown in picture at all ( where brand new slab holder is shown, recently introduced by PCGS). I checked PCGS number and it shows authenticity of coin, so I consider coin genuine, may be I'll send it to PCGS to recapitulate coin with new slab.

Decided to buy five to take advantage of "per 5" pricing. All were good quality coins, fairly graded. Two of the PCGS holders were chipped, but I think this does not affect value. Customer service was great, as always. I think that, although gold has been falling for three-plus years, and may continue to fall, there will come a time when these collector coins will be worth more than today.

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